In "I Wanna Marry 'Harry,' " 12 single American women travel to Britain to meet a young man they are led to believe is -- yes, you guessed it -- Prince Harry, the rakish 29-year-old grandson of Queen Elizabeth II and fourth in line to the British throne.

Harry he is not, of course, but, rather, one Matthew Hicks, a lookalike who is not in line for anything except the starring role in a dating show that proves just how hard it is to embarrass TV programmers. (It's incredibly hard.)

As the Fox release puts it: "Will he be able to convince them he's regal? And if he does, will they fall for the crown, or fall in love with the real him?"

Another question: After seeing this show, will viewers have any faith left in human nature?

Oh, well, that probably disappeared a long time ago for anyone who watches a lot of reality TV. Actually, "Harry" recalls the pre-"American Idol" Fox of more than a decade ago, when sensationalistic fare like "Joe Millionaire" and "Celebrity Boxing" ruled.

NBC announced its summer programming lineup on Wednesday, which includes six new scripted series, a new unscripted series, as well as new seasons of "Last Comic Standing," "America's Got Talent" and "American Ninja Warrior." In its announcement, the network says this is the most original summer...

Having tackled drama, reality and talk shows, AMC announced Wednesday it was venturing into a new genre, comedy, greenlighting its first sitcom pilot and announcing development of projects with such established comedy names as Seth Rogen and John Leguizamo.